The Unethical Environmental Lawyer
13 October 2022, 6:00 pm–7:00 pm

This Inaugural Lecture will be delivered by Professor Steven Vaughan (Faculty of Laws, UCL)
Event Information
Open to
- All
Organiser
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UCL Laws Events
Location
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UCL LawsBentham House, Endsleigh GardensLondonWC1H 0EG
‘The Unethical Environmental Lawyer’
delivered by Professor Steven Vaughan (Faculty of Laws, UCL)
Chairs: Professor Elen Stokes (Cardiff University) and Professor Richard Moorhead (University of Exeter)
About this Inaugural Lecture
As a species and as a planet, we are facing significant environmental harms, many of which are highly likely to only get worse over time - climate change, air pollution, biodiversity loss, deforestation, chemical harms, waste pollution, poor water quality, and so on. Somewhere in the story of each of these forms of environmental harm are environmental lawyers. They work in law firms large and small; they work for the government and regulators as civil servants; they work in-house in large corporations and charities. These lawyers lubricate, lobby, legislate, and litigate for their clients. In this talk, Professor Vaughan will suggest that some of the environmental harms that environmental lawyers help their clients bring about, ‘perfectly legally’, raise important and significant questions about the ethics of that lawyering. Do environmental lawyers do things that cost society – in the form of environmental harms – too much? And does legal ethics (written down in regulatory rulebooks and, more generally, in the theories of lawyers’ ethics) help or hinder those actions?
About the Speaker
Steven Vaughan is professor of law and professional ethics at UCL Laws and Deputy Dean of the Faculty. He is a former City solicitor whose research spans environmental law and lawyers’ ethics. Steven is interested in the theory and practice of regulation, and has held various committee positions at the Solicitors Regulation Authority and the Legal Services Board. He is currently a Council Member of the Health and Care Professions Council. Keen that his work engages with an audience beyond the academy, Steven has spoken at the Hay Festival of Literature and Arts and written for a number of media outlets (including The Times, The Guardian and The Lawyer). Steven has also held visiting fellowships at Stanford University, the University of Melbourne, and the Frank J. Kelley Institute of Ethics.
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About Current Legal Problems
The Current Legal Problems (CLP) lecture series and annual volume was established over fifty five years ago at the Faculty of Laws, University College London and is recognised as a major reference point for legal scholarship.